The Trump organization has requested hundreds of the H2-B visas for workers at Mar-a-Lago since 2010

President Trump’s administration is blocking Haitians from obtaining certain temporary work visas — and the move could leave his family’s businesses with a diminished employee pool.

The Department of Homeland Security in a regulatory filing said Haiti was removed from the list of more than 80 countries eligible for the H-2B as well as the H-2A visas due to “high levels of fraud and abuse” and a “high rate of overstaying the terms” of their visas.

Since 2010, the Trump Organization has requested more than 500 visas for foreign workers at Mar-a-Lago, the luxury golf resort he’s since nicknamed the “Winter White House,” according to Department of Homeland Security records. Many of the foreign workers brought in to staff the club on a seasonal basis are reportedly from Haiti and Romania.

For the 2017-18 tourist season, the Palm Beach resort applied for and received 70 H-2B visas to fill jobs ranging from cooks and housekeepers to waiters and waitresses.

And despite building a presidential campaign on “Making America Great Again” and hiring local workers, the Trump Organization this year secured approval for six more visas than it did for the previous season.

That figure also doesn’t include a request for H-2A visas — a visa for agricultural workers also no longer available to Haitians.

At the end of November, Trump Vineyard Estates posted jobs available at the Virginia winery to foreign workers on the H-2A visa with a start date listed for January 22.

It’s not uncommon for resort owners and employers to rely on the H-2B visa, which allows for foreign worker to temporarily enter the country and perform non-agricultural job responsibilities.

The visas are typically valid for 10 months, though there is an option to extend the visa for up to the three years.

Most of the guest employees at the Florida golf club are reportedly from Haiti and Romania.

(Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

It’s unclear how many of the Haitian workers at Trump-related businesses were using the temporary visas. Calls to the organization, Mar-a-Lago and a job placement company used by Trump Organization were not returned.

Haitians on a variety of non-immigrant visas, including both H-2B and H-2A, had an estimated visas overstay rate of nearly 40% for 2016, according to a DHS report published last year.

Overall, more than 739,000 people on the same selection of visas overstayed their admissions last year — resulting in a total overstay rate of 1.47%

In addition to Haiti, Belize and Samoa were also removed from the eligibility list, with the DHS citing human trafficking violations and not taking back deported nationals as the primary causes.